Monkeys in Florida at-Risk of Electrocution
In the shadow of the Ft. Lauderdale airport lives a troop of monkeys. These are vervet monkeys, and they are not native to Florida. They’re descendants of a group of African monkeys that escaped from a lab about 80 years ago. Missy Williams is a biologist who founded the Dania Beach Vervet Project, in hopes of caring for this out-of-place population. Some of the monkeys have been hit by vehicles, and Williams says the climbing primates are at a risk of electrocution from power lines.
Видео Monkeys in Florida at-Risk of Electrocution канала Inside Edition
Видео Monkeys in Florida at-Risk of Electrocution канала Inside Edition
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Hero Rat That Detected Over 100 Landmines in Cambodia Dies3 Stranded Boaters Rescued When Coast Guard Spots ThemGamer Says Headset Protected Him From Stray BulletWaffle House Customers Raise $5,000 for Server With CancerLost Donkey Seen With Herd of ElkHiker Lucky to Be Alive After Falling Into Narrow CreviceNashville Woman Offers Free Hair Braiding For Back-to-SchoolJet Found 53 Years After DisappearanceMeet Methuselah, the World’s Oldest Aquarium FishRare Albino Jaguarundi Cub Found in ColombiaElephants Call Each Other by Name: StudyHow This Restaurant Worker Saved a Kid From Alleged Child AbuseCar Gets Hit by Train and Cops Rush to Help DriverInside Europe's 1st 3D-Printed HouseStranded Man Saved After Using Rocks to Spell Out 'Help'Museum to Display Young T. Rex Fossil Found by Dad and Sons10-Year-Old Saves Family From Nearly Fatal Carbon Monoxide PoisoningJoe DiMeo Gets Full Face Transplant in Historic SurgeryCameron Boyce’s Last Film Helps Keep His Legacy AliveCouple Making California Streets Prettier With ‘Guerrilla Gardening’Artist’s 3D Cat Portraits Look Like Real Animals